The Union Pacific railroad is in the process of replacing a
bridge over the Gasconade river at the town of Gasconade, near the confluence
of the Gasconade
river with the Missouri river. The existing failing bridge is well over 100
yrs old and is traversed by at least 45 trains a day, including Amtrack. The
old bridge serves as a silent portal to a time line in the history
of Missouri,
when residents of this state found themselves in the flux of a changing country.
Through that portal one can find a glimpse of a disaster that shook the lives
and hearts of the entire City of St. Louis.

On July 1st, 1851, residents of St. Louis turned out to celebrate the start
of construction of the Pacific Railroad, connecting St. Louis with the Pacific
Ocean and California. Prominent citizens, including Mayor Luther M. Kennett,
Thomas Allen, James H. Lucas, Grimsley and Edward Bates, took part in a ground
breaking ceremony that included speeches, a national salute, and the reading
of a poem written for the moment in history. All of St. Louis looked forward
with great anticipation.

Construction of the railroad progressed slowly at first, due to the time
required to make tunnels and build bridges. Irish workers, poorly fed and
often on strike,
were employed to construct the railroad. In two years time, the line was open
to the area, now the city of Pacific. However, in less than 4 1/2 years time,
by late 1855, the line was completed 125 miles west to Jefferson City. Plans
were made to celebrate the construction and promote further development of
the line, by a special train of invited guests and dignitaries who would travel
the new route to the state capital and convene with the Governor. Included
in the guest list were the Mayor and City Council of St. Louis, the National
Guard and band, Company A of the St. Louis Grays, many high ranking professional
and businessmen, a number of state and county officers, and representatives
from other railroads. Little did the passengers know, all aboard had been invited
to the single worst railroad disaster in Missouri’s history.

The train left St. Louis in a gloomy heavy rain on November 1st, 1855 with
six hundred passengers aboard 14 cars. A supportive crowd cheered the train
on as it departed on that rainy fall day. The atmosphere aboard the train was
one of celebration. The band played and drinks were served. When the train
reached Hermann, an additional car was attached to the train and a company
of uniformed soldiers and a band of musicians joined the rest of the passengers.

Initially, the chief road engineer had planned to stop the train at the Gasconade
River bridge, so the guests could see the new 760 foot long structure. Due
to being behind schedule a fatal decision was made to not stop and continue
on to the Jefferson City destination. When the train reached the bridge over
the Gasconade River, the temporary wooden trestle work between the east bank
and the first pier collapsed. The train plunged 36 feet into the river. Only
one car remained on the tracks after the disaster. The steam engine and seven
cars fell through the broken timbers, with the others cars rolling down the
embankment. Over thirty individuals were killed with hundreds injured seriously.
The survivors were confronted with a scene of horror. A moment of silence was
soon interrupted with the hiss of the partially submerged locomotive, the shrieks
of the wounded and the sounds of breaking glass and splintering wood as the
trapped passengers worked to free themselves from the wreckage. The less seriously
injured passengers struggled to drag the injured and dead from the wreckage
and collapsed timbers. Mangled bleeding bodies were carried in the torrents
of rain to nearby shanties for shelter. Late in the afternoon, many of the
wounded were moved to Hermann where a hotel was converted to a temporary hospital.

The rain continued through the night and the next day when a special hospital
train was sent from St. Louis to Hermann and to the wreckage scene. Survivors
with few injuries worked with railroad employees to carry bodies of the dead
and load them into freight cars. Survivors were loaded into passenger cars.
The once soldiers of celebration, now crudely bandaged or carried on stretchers,
overwhelmed by the atmosphere of tragedy, were relieved to be aboard a train
to go back home. But the tragedy was prolonged by the events that followed.

When the train approached Boeuf Creek, east of the present day New Haven (17
miles east of Hermann), the hospital train was stopped. Boeuf Creek was a raging
torrent and out of its banks from the continuous rain of the last two days.
Trees washed down stream by the flood waters, piled up against the bridge pilings.
Railroad engineers feared that this bridge would also fail if the train attempted
to cross. Another train was brought from St. Louis to the east side of Boeuf
Creek bridge. Survivors, able to walk, made their way across the bridge and
boarded the train on the east side. The severely wounded and dead were left
aboard the original hospital train. Engineers decided to push the cars across
the bridge one at a time and then bring the locomotive across. Once those who
could walk were clear of the bridge and aboard, the first car was pushed to
the edge of the bridge. Just as the car approached, the entire bridge collapsed
and disappeared into the raging flood waters. The train load of seriously injured
and dead were shuttled back to Millers Landing (New Haven). Arrangements were
made for a ferryboat to take them, the next day, to the town of Washington
where they would once again board the hospital train to take them back to St.
Louis. Through the rain filled night, 31 rough coffins were made to transport
the dead. The most seriously injured finally returned to St. Louis on November
3rd.

The entire St. Louis was stunned by the disaster. Prominent citizens and
leaders had been lost and included: E. Church Blackburn (president of the
city council),
Henry Chouteau, Calvin Case (Industrialist), and Mann Butler (attorney and
Kentuckian historian). Two of the best known clergyman of the city, Rev. Dr.
Artemas Bullard of the First Presbyterian Church, and Rev. John Teasdale of
the Third Baptist Church were among the dead. Public mourning took place during
the next two days (Sunday and Monday). Washington King, the mayor of St. Louis,
survived with injuries and proclaimed Monday, the 5th day of November “a
day of cessation from all labor as a tribute of respect to those who are most
deeply stricken by this terrible blow, and a day of heartfelt thankfulness
and gratitude to God by and on account of all who are saved from death.” Businesses
were closed and the churches were opened for worship.

The existing bridge partially consists of the original bridge built before
the civil war. Most people do not know that the massive stone piers that support
the bridge, were built on a wooden platform on the river floor, supported by
wooden pilings. In recent years, the piers have shifted and the movement can
be seen when one looks down the tracks across the bridge. Union Pacific is
in a race against time to replace the bridge before it once again fails. Trains
slow to 25 miles per hour to cross.

Mostly, the society of today has forgotten this event in the time line of our
state history. It is an event that we and our off spring should remember. The
disaster speaks of the enthusiasm of earlier citizens to address the transportation
needs of our state..... a determination that was not dampened by the Gasconade
disaster.

References

Centennial History of Missouri by Walter B. StevensThe Bulletin- July 1967, the Missouri Historical Society

Note: The author comments that he has located related pictures in a museum
in Hermann Missouri.